• Page 419 →Fay M. Jackson (1902-1979) was a pioneering African American journalist, publisher, publicist, and newspaper correspondent. At sixteen she left Dallas for Los Angeles where she attended LA Polytechnic High School. In 1922, she entered the University of Southern California where she majored in journalism and philosophy. During the late twenties, she founded and co-edited Flash, a Los Angeles based Black magazine, and was in close correspondence with Arna Bontemps and Wallace Thurman, two writers who had left the West Coast for Harlem. In the mid-thirties, Jackson became the first Hollywood correspondent for the Associated Negro Press (ANP). It was for the ANP that she covered the coronation of King George VI of England in 1937. While in Europe she interviewed H. G. Wells, Haile Selassie, Paul Robeson, Josephine Baker, and other extraordinary personalities. Her interest in writing and publishing continued throughout her life although she later earned her livelihood as a real estate broker and notary public.

Fay M. Jackson postcard

From Women Making History: The Revolutionary Feminist Postcard Art of Helaine Victoria Press by Julia M. Allen and Jocelyn H. Cohen

  • Part of the Sisters of the Harlem Renaissance series, a set of 26 postcards in a folio album. Printed offset, 4 ¼” x 6”, in black with black and turquoise border. ISBN 0-9623911-1-5.
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  • HISTORY / Women
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